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© 2017 Arianto Muditomo All Rights Reserved
Copyright Notice:
This presentation is prepared by Author for Perbanas Institute as a part of Author Lecture Series. It is to be used for educational and non-
commercial purposes only and is not to be changed, altered, or used for any commercial endeavor without the express written permission from
Author and/or Perbanas Institute. Appropriate legal action may be taken against any person, organization, or entity attempting to misrepresent,
charge, or profit from the educational materials contained here.
Authors are allowed to use their own articles without seeking permission from any person, organization, or entity.
arianto.muditomo@2017
1
• Session #1: Information System in Business
• Session #2: IT Strategic Planning
• Session #3: Business Information System
• Session #4: Business Intelligence & Decision Support
• Session #5: Ethics, Privacy and Security
• Session #6: e-Business and e-Commerce
• Session #7: Knowledge Management
• Session #8: Enterprise Information System
Referrences:
1) Baltzan, Paige 2014. Business Driven Information Systems. 4th Edition. New York: McGraw-Hill.
2) Pearlson, Keri E. And Saunders Carol S. 2013. Managing and Using Information Systems: A Strategic Approach. 5th Ed.
Danvers: John Wiley & Sons.
3) Turban, Efraim, Volonino, Linda, and Wood, Gregory 2013. Information Technology for Management. 8th Edition.
Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons.
4) Turban, Efraim, Strauss, Judy, and Lai, Linda 2016. Social Commerce: Marketing and Technology Management. Hidelberg:
Springer.
5) Xu, Jun and Quaddus, Mohammed 2013. Managing Information Systems: Ten Essential Topics. Amsterdam: Atlantis Press.
6) Turban, Rainer: Introduction to Information Systems Enablig and Transforming Business 2nd Ed., John Wiley & Sons.2009
7) Kenneth C. Laudon and Jane P. Laudon, Management Information Systems, Managing The Digital Firm, Pearson: Prentice
Hall 2006
8) Business information systems : technology, development and management for the e-business / Paul Bocij, Andrew
Greasley and Simon Hickie. – Fifth edition., © Pearson Education Limited 2015
arianto.muditomo@2017
LEARNING OUTCOME
2
§ Explain the potential executive, managerial, and operational support of enterprise
systems, their success factors, and reasons for failure.
§ Describe enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems and how ERP investments are
justified.
§ Describe supply chain management (SCM) networks and solutions.
§ Explain the collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment (CPFR) functions related
to SCM.
§ Describe customer relationship management (CRM) systems and their role in customer
acquisition, retention, and customer lifetime value.
arianto.muditomo@2017
§ What is Enterprise System?
§ What is Enterprise Resource Planning System?
§ What flow are managed by Supply Chain Management system?
§ What do you know about CPFR?
3
arianto.muditomo@2017
= Systems that help managers and companies improve their performance by enabling
them to seamlessly share data among departments and with external business
partners.
= Enterprise systems allow workers to access and analyze real-time information and
transaction processes across the entire organization.
4
arianto.muditomo@2017
5
Enterprise System
Type of IS
Goals
Problems
ERP SCM
CRM
CPFR
KM
ERP is the software infrastructure that links an enterprise’s internal
applications and supports its external business processes
ERP systems are commercial software packages that integrate
business processes, including supply chains, manufacturing, finance,
human resources, budgeting, sales, and customer service.
SCM software refers to software that supports the steps in the supply chain—
manufacturing, inventory control, scheduling, and transportation.
SCM improves decision making, forecasting, optimization, and analysis.
CPFR is a set of data-driven business processes
designed to improve the ability to predict and
coordinate with supply chain partners.
With CPFR, suppliers and retailers collaborate in
planning and demand forecasting in order to
ensure that members of the supply chain will
have the right amount of raw materials and
finished goods when they need them.
CRM creates a total view of customers to
maximize share-of-wallet and profitability.
Also, it is a business strategy to segment
and manage customers to optimize their
long-term value.
KM helps organizations identify,
select, organize, disseminate, and
share information and expertise.
Enterprise resource planning - Supply chain management -
Collaborative planning, forecasting, and replenishment -
Customer relationship management - Knowledge management
arianto.muditomo@2017
6
High maintenance costs.
•Maintaining and upgrading legacy systems are some of the most difficult challenges facing
CIOs (chief information officers) and IT departments.
Business value deterioration.
•Technological change weakens the business value of legacy systems that have been
implemented over many years and at huge cost.
Inflexibility.
•Monolithic legacy architectures are inflexible. That is, these huge systems cannot be
easily redesigned to share data with newer systems, unlike modern architectures.
Integration obstacles.
•Legacy systems execute business processes that are hard- wired by rigid, predefined
process flows. Their hardwiring makes integration with other systems such as CRM and
Internet-based applications difficult and sometimes impossible.
Lack of staff.
•IT departments find it increasingly difficult to hire staff who are qualified to work on
applications written in languages no longer used in modern technologies.
arianto.muditomo@2017
IMPLEMENTATION CHALLENGES
AND BEST PRACTICES
7
Implementing an enterprise system is challenging because it
requires extensive changes in processes, people, and
existing systems.
Three required changes are:
1. Redesign of business processes.
2. Changes in how people perform their jobs.
3. Integration of many types of information systems.
arianto.muditomo@2017
= From a technology perspective, ERP is the software infrastructure that links an
enterprise’s internal applications and supports its external business processes
8
• Bring silos of information together to enable managers to
really understand what is going on
• Expand a company’s reach beyond its internal networks
to its suppliers, customers, and partners
• Provide the information access, integrated business processes,
and modern technology platform necessary to become and
remain competitive
• Support all, or a great majority, of a company’s business
functions and processes
arianto.muditomo@2017
KEY OF ERP SUCCESS DATA INTEGRATION
9
v Implementing an enterprise system may be a competitive necessity for
companies with data management problems.
v The greater the number of applications and databases, the greater the
complexity of data management because of the numerous interfaces needed
to exchange data
Database #A Database #B
Database #C
Integrated Db
Processing
System
arianto.muditomo@2017
10
FROM STAND-ALONE
DATA SILOS TO AN
INTEGRATED
ENTERPRISE SYSTEM
Source: [3] p.292
arianto.muditomo@2017
INTERFACES WITH
11
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
Layer.
The core ERP functions are integrated
with other systems or modules that are
bolted-on, including SCM, PLM, CRM,
and BI.
The ERP interfaces with legacy
applications through an enterprise
application integration (EAI) layer and
with external business partners through
a B2B gateway
Enterprise Application
Integration Layer.
The ERP interfaces with legacy
applications through an enterprise
application integration (EAI)
layer. EAI is middleware that
connects and acts as a go-between
for applications and their business
processes.
B2B Gateway Layer. Business-to-
business integration (B2Bi) is vital
to ensure the efficient, accurate,
and timely flow of data across
internal ISs and external business
partners.
arianto.muditomo@2017
= The journey that a product travels, starting with raw material suppliers, then to
manufacturers or assemblers, then forward to distributors and retail sales
shelves, and ultimately to customers, is its supply chain.
= Supply chains vary significantly depending on the type, complexity, and
perishability of the product
12
Procurement of
materials
Transformation of
materials into
intermediate or
finished products
Distribution of
finished products
to retailers or
customers
Recycling or
disposal in a
landfill
arianto.muditomo@2017
13
Supplier & Sub
Supplier
Upstream
Distributor;
Customer
DownstreamInternal Chain
Information Flow
Supply chains involve the flow of materials, data, and money
arianto.muditomo@2017
MATERIALS DATA MONEY
14
Material or
product
flow
Information
flow
Financial
flow
This is the movement
of materials and
goods from a
supplier to its
consumer.
For example,
chipmaker Intel
supplies computer
chips to its customer
Dell. Dell supplies its
computers to end
users.
This is the movement of
detailed data among
members of the supply
chain, for example, order
information, customer
information, order
fulfillment, delivery
status, and proof-of-
delivery confirmation.
This is the transfer
of payments and
financial
arrangements; for
example, billing
payment schedules,
credit terms, and
payment via
electronic funds
transfer (EFT).
arianto.muditomo@2017
= is the efficient management of the flows of material, data, and
money in the supply chain
SCM software refers to software that supports the steps in the supply
chain—manufacturing, inventory control, scheduling, and
transportation.
SCM software concentrates on improving decision making, forecasting,
optimization, and analysis.
15
arianto.muditomo@2017
§ There is a lot of uncertainty in product demand.
§ The most common solution to supply chain uncertainties is to build inventories, or safety stock,
as insurance. High levels of safety stock increase the costs of holding inventory.
§ The concepts of continuous replenishment,VMI, and collaboration evolved into the more
comprehensive model known as collaborative planning, forecasting, and replenishment (CPFR).
16
CPFR is a set of data-driven business processes designed to improve
the ability to predict and coordinate with supply chain partners.
arianto.muditomo@2017
CPFR MAIN COLLABORATION ACTIVITIES
17
Analysis
Monitoring outcomes of
planning and execution,
assessing results and key
performance metrics,
sharing insights with
partners, and adjusting
plans to improve results
Strategy & Planning
Setting the ground rules
for the collaborative
relationship and
specifying the product mix
Demand & Supply Mgt
Forecasting consumer demand
and order and shipment
requirements over the planning
horizon
Execution
Performing activities, such
as placing orders,
shipping and delivery,
receiving, stocking,
tracking sales transactions,
and making payments
Strategy &
Planning
Demand &
Supply
Management
Execution
Analysis
arianto.muditomo@2017
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT (CRM) SYSTEMS
18
Every company depends on customers for revenues and
growth.
Marketing managers run campaigns, promotions,
commercials, and advertisements to attract new customers,
or to increase sales to existing customers, or to do both.
Attracting new customers is expensive;
Newly acquired customers are unprofitable until they
have purchased enough products or services to exceed
the cost to acquire and service them.
arianto.muditomo@2017
§ Build greater customer loyalty and
therefore greater profitability per customer
§ Deter customer attrition (loss of a customer)
§ Acquire new customers who are most likely to
become profitable
§ Up-sell(sell more profitable products/services) or
cross-sell (sell additional products/ services) to
unprofitable customers to move them to a profit
position
§ Reduce inefficiencies that waste advertising dollars
19
“Those companies who know their customers, understand their needs, and communicate
intelligently with them will always have a competitive advantage over those that don’t.”
~ Peter F. Drucker ~
arianto.muditomo@2017
20
Figure 10.11 CRM. Source: [3] p.308
arianto.muditomo@2017
SOME OF THE MAJOR ISSUES RELATING TO
CRM FAILURES
21
v Difficulty in measuring and valuing
intangible benefits.There are only a few
tangible benefits to CRM.
v Failure to identify and focus on specific
business problems that the CRM can
solve.
v Lack of active senior management (non-
IT) sponsorship.
v Poor user acceptance.This can occur for a
variety of reasons, such as unclear
benefits—that is, CRM is a tool for
management, but it may not help a rep
sell more effectively—and usability
problems.
v An attempt to automate a poorly defined
business process in the CRM
implementation.
arianto.muditomo@2017
END OF SEASON #8
POST LEARNING OUTCOME
22
§ What is Enterprise System?
Enterprise systems are information systems that support several departments and/or the
entire enterprise.The most notable are ERP, which supports supply chains, and CRM
§ What is Enterprise Resource Planning System?
ERP is the software infrastructure that links an enterprise’s internal applications and supports
its external business processes
§ What flow are managed by Supply Chain Management system?
Supply chains involve the flow of materials, data, and money
§ What do you know about CPFR?
CPFR is a set of data-driven business processes designed to improve the ability to predict
and coordinate with supply chain partners.
arianto.muditomo@2017
23
Contact
Perbanas Institute Jakarta
Jl. Perbanas, Karet Kuningan
Setiabudi, Jakarta, 12940
Telp: 525 2533 / 522 2501-4
Fax: 522 8460 / 522 3064
email: contact@perbanas.id
• Session #1: Information System in Business
• Session #2: IT Strategic Planning
• Session #3: Business Information System
• Session #4: Business Intelligence & Decision Support
• Session #5: Ethics, Privacy and Security
• Session #6: e-Business and e-Commerce
• Session #7: Knowledge Management
• Session #8: Enterprise Information System

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008. Enterprise Information System

  • 1. © 2017 Arianto Muditomo All Rights Reserved Copyright Notice: This presentation is prepared by Author for Perbanas Institute as a part of Author Lecture Series. It is to be used for educational and non- commercial purposes only and is not to be changed, altered, or used for any commercial endeavor without the express written permission from Author and/or Perbanas Institute. Appropriate legal action may be taken against any person, organization, or entity attempting to misrepresent, charge, or profit from the educational materials contained here. Authors are allowed to use their own articles without seeking permission from any person, organization, or entity.
  • 2. arianto.muditomo@2017 1 • Session #1: Information System in Business • Session #2: IT Strategic Planning • Session #3: Business Information System • Session #4: Business Intelligence & Decision Support • Session #5: Ethics, Privacy and Security • Session #6: e-Business and e-Commerce • Session #7: Knowledge Management • Session #8: Enterprise Information System Referrences: 1) Baltzan, Paige 2014. Business Driven Information Systems. 4th Edition. New York: McGraw-Hill. 2) Pearlson, Keri E. And Saunders Carol S. 2013. Managing and Using Information Systems: A Strategic Approach. 5th Ed. Danvers: John Wiley & Sons. 3) Turban, Efraim, Volonino, Linda, and Wood, Gregory 2013. Information Technology for Management. 8th Edition. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. 4) Turban, Efraim, Strauss, Judy, and Lai, Linda 2016. Social Commerce: Marketing and Technology Management. Hidelberg: Springer. 5) Xu, Jun and Quaddus, Mohammed 2013. Managing Information Systems: Ten Essential Topics. Amsterdam: Atlantis Press. 6) Turban, Rainer: Introduction to Information Systems Enablig and Transforming Business 2nd Ed., John Wiley & Sons.2009 7) Kenneth C. Laudon and Jane P. Laudon, Management Information Systems, Managing The Digital Firm, Pearson: Prentice Hall 2006 8) Business information systems : technology, development and management for the e-business / Paul Bocij, Andrew Greasley and Simon Hickie. – Fifth edition., © Pearson Education Limited 2015
  • 3. arianto.muditomo@2017 LEARNING OUTCOME 2 § Explain the potential executive, managerial, and operational support of enterprise systems, their success factors, and reasons for failure. § Describe enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems and how ERP investments are justified. § Describe supply chain management (SCM) networks and solutions. § Explain the collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment (CPFR) functions related to SCM. § Describe customer relationship management (CRM) systems and their role in customer acquisition, retention, and customer lifetime value.
  • 4. arianto.muditomo@2017 § What is Enterprise System? § What is Enterprise Resource Planning System? § What flow are managed by Supply Chain Management system? § What do you know about CPFR? 3
  • 5. arianto.muditomo@2017 = Systems that help managers and companies improve their performance by enabling them to seamlessly share data among departments and with external business partners. = Enterprise systems allow workers to access and analyze real-time information and transaction processes across the entire organization. 4
  • 6. arianto.muditomo@2017 5 Enterprise System Type of IS Goals Problems ERP SCM CRM CPFR KM ERP is the software infrastructure that links an enterprise’s internal applications and supports its external business processes ERP systems are commercial software packages that integrate business processes, including supply chains, manufacturing, finance, human resources, budgeting, sales, and customer service. SCM software refers to software that supports the steps in the supply chain— manufacturing, inventory control, scheduling, and transportation. SCM improves decision making, forecasting, optimization, and analysis. CPFR is a set of data-driven business processes designed to improve the ability to predict and coordinate with supply chain partners. With CPFR, suppliers and retailers collaborate in planning and demand forecasting in order to ensure that members of the supply chain will have the right amount of raw materials and finished goods when they need them. CRM creates a total view of customers to maximize share-of-wallet and profitability. Also, it is a business strategy to segment and manage customers to optimize their long-term value. KM helps organizations identify, select, organize, disseminate, and share information and expertise. Enterprise resource planning - Supply chain management - Collaborative planning, forecasting, and replenishment - Customer relationship management - Knowledge management
  • 7. arianto.muditomo@2017 6 High maintenance costs. •Maintaining and upgrading legacy systems are some of the most difficult challenges facing CIOs (chief information officers) and IT departments. Business value deterioration. •Technological change weakens the business value of legacy systems that have been implemented over many years and at huge cost. Inflexibility. •Monolithic legacy architectures are inflexible. That is, these huge systems cannot be easily redesigned to share data with newer systems, unlike modern architectures. Integration obstacles. •Legacy systems execute business processes that are hard- wired by rigid, predefined process flows. Their hardwiring makes integration with other systems such as CRM and Internet-based applications difficult and sometimes impossible. Lack of staff. •IT departments find it increasingly difficult to hire staff who are qualified to work on applications written in languages no longer used in modern technologies.
  • 8. arianto.muditomo@2017 IMPLEMENTATION CHALLENGES AND BEST PRACTICES 7 Implementing an enterprise system is challenging because it requires extensive changes in processes, people, and existing systems. Three required changes are: 1. Redesign of business processes. 2. Changes in how people perform their jobs. 3. Integration of many types of information systems.
  • 9. arianto.muditomo@2017 = From a technology perspective, ERP is the software infrastructure that links an enterprise’s internal applications and supports its external business processes 8 • Bring silos of information together to enable managers to really understand what is going on • Expand a company’s reach beyond its internal networks to its suppliers, customers, and partners • Provide the information access, integrated business processes, and modern technology platform necessary to become and remain competitive • Support all, or a great majority, of a company’s business functions and processes
  • 10. arianto.muditomo@2017 KEY OF ERP SUCCESS DATA INTEGRATION 9 v Implementing an enterprise system may be a competitive necessity for companies with data management problems. v The greater the number of applications and databases, the greater the complexity of data management because of the numerous interfaces needed to exchange data Database #A Database #B Database #C Integrated Db Processing System
  • 11. arianto.muditomo@2017 10 FROM STAND-ALONE DATA SILOS TO AN INTEGRATED ENTERPRISE SYSTEM Source: [3] p.292
  • 12. arianto.muditomo@2017 INTERFACES WITH 11 Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Layer. The core ERP functions are integrated with other systems or modules that are bolted-on, including SCM, PLM, CRM, and BI. The ERP interfaces with legacy applications through an enterprise application integration (EAI) layer and with external business partners through a B2B gateway Enterprise Application Integration Layer. The ERP interfaces with legacy applications through an enterprise application integration (EAI) layer. EAI is middleware that connects and acts as a go-between for applications and their business processes. B2B Gateway Layer. Business-to- business integration (B2Bi) is vital to ensure the efficient, accurate, and timely flow of data across internal ISs and external business partners.
  • 13. arianto.muditomo@2017 = The journey that a product travels, starting with raw material suppliers, then to manufacturers or assemblers, then forward to distributors and retail sales shelves, and ultimately to customers, is its supply chain. = Supply chains vary significantly depending on the type, complexity, and perishability of the product 12 Procurement of materials Transformation of materials into intermediate or finished products Distribution of finished products to retailers or customers Recycling or disposal in a landfill
  • 14. arianto.muditomo@2017 13 Supplier & Sub Supplier Upstream Distributor; Customer DownstreamInternal Chain Information Flow Supply chains involve the flow of materials, data, and money
  • 15. arianto.muditomo@2017 MATERIALS DATA MONEY 14 Material or product flow Information flow Financial flow This is the movement of materials and goods from a supplier to its consumer. For example, chipmaker Intel supplies computer chips to its customer Dell. Dell supplies its computers to end users. This is the movement of detailed data among members of the supply chain, for example, order information, customer information, order fulfillment, delivery status, and proof-of- delivery confirmation. This is the transfer of payments and financial arrangements; for example, billing payment schedules, credit terms, and payment via electronic funds transfer (EFT).
  • 16. arianto.muditomo@2017 = is the efficient management of the flows of material, data, and money in the supply chain SCM software refers to software that supports the steps in the supply chain—manufacturing, inventory control, scheduling, and transportation. SCM software concentrates on improving decision making, forecasting, optimization, and analysis. 15
  • 17. arianto.muditomo@2017 § There is a lot of uncertainty in product demand. § The most common solution to supply chain uncertainties is to build inventories, or safety stock, as insurance. High levels of safety stock increase the costs of holding inventory. § The concepts of continuous replenishment,VMI, and collaboration evolved into the more comprehensive model known as collaborative planning, forecasting, and replenishment (CPFR). 16 CPFR is a set of data-driven business processes designed to improve the ability to predict and coordinate with supply chain partners.
  • 18. arianto.muditomo@2017 CPFR MAIN COLLABORATION ACTIVITIES 17 Analysis Monitoring outcomes of planning and execution, assessing results and key performance metrics, sharing insights with partners, and adjusting plans to improve results Strategy & Planning Setting the ground rules for the collaborative relationship and specifying the product mix Demand & Supply Mgt Forecasting consumer demand and order and shipment requirements over the planning horizon Execution Performing activities, such as placing orders, shipping and delivery, receiving, stocking, tracking sales transactions, and making payments Strategy & Planning Demand & Supply Management Execution Analysis
  • 19. arianto.muditomo@2017 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT (CRM) SYSTEMS 18 Every company depends on customers for revenues and growth. Marketing managers run campaigns, promotions, commercials, and advertisements to attract new customers, or to increase sales to existing customers, or to do both. Attracting new customers is expensive; Newly acquired customers are unprofitable until they have purchased enough products or services to exceed the cost to acquire and service them.
  • 20. arianto.muditomo@2017 § Build greater customer loyalty and therefore greater profitability per customer § Deter customer attrition (loss of a customer) § Acquire new customers who are most likely to become profitable § Up-sell(sell more profitable products/services) or cross-sell (sell additional products/ services) to unprofitable customers to move them to a profit position § Reduce inefficiencies that waste advertising dollars 19 “Those companies who know their customers, understand their needs, and communicate intelligently with them will always have a competitive advantage over those that don’t.” ~ Peter F. Drucker ~
  • 22. arianto.muditomo@2017 SOME OF THE MAJOR ISSUES RELATING TO CRM FAILURES 21 v Difficulty in measuring and valuing intangible benefits.There are only a few tangible benefits to CRM. v Failure to identify and focus on specific business problems that the CRM can solve. v Lack of active senior management (non- IT) sponsorship. v Poor user acceptance.This can occur for a variety of reasons, such as unclear benefits—that is, CRM is a tool for management, but it may not help a rep sell more effectively—and usability problems. v An attempt to automate a poorly defined business process in the CRM implementation.
  • 23. arianto.muditomo@2017 END OF SEASON #8 POST LEARNING OUTCOME 22 § What is Enterprise System? Enterprise systems are information systems that support several departments and/or the entire enterprise.The most notable are ERP, which supports supply chains, and CRM § What is Enterprise Resource Planning System? ERP is the software infrastructure that links an enterprise’s internal applications and supports its external business processes § What flow are managed by Supply Chain Management system? Supply chains involve the flow of materials, data, and money § What do you know about CPFR? CPFR is a set of data-driven business processes designed to improve the ability to predict and coordinate with supply chain partners.
  • 24. arianto.muditomo@2017 23 Contact Perbanas Institute Jakarta Jl. Perbanas, Karet Kuningan Setiabudi, Jakarta, 12940 Telp: 525 2533 / 522 2501-4 Fax: 522 8460 / 522 3064 email: [email protected] • Session #1: Information System in Business • Session #2: IT Strategic Planning • Session #3: Business Information System • Session #4: Business Intelligence & Decision Support • Session #5: Ethics, Privacy and Security • Session #6: e-Business and e-Commerce • Session #7: Knowledge Management • Session #8: Enterprise Information System